Fly
on the wall
Harish
Gupta
Modi-Shah
Eye the Last Frontier Now
For
the Bharatiya Janata Party, Punjab has long remained the final
political fortress it could never conquer on its own. But with the
2027 Assembly election now firmly on the radar, the Narendra
Modi–Amit Shah combine has begun crafting an aggressive
multi-layered strategy to crack the border state — politically,
socially and psychologically.
The
BJP believes the ruling Aam Aadmi Party government under Chief
Minister Bhagwant Mann is increasingly vulnerable. The recent twin
low-intensity blasts near the Army cantonment boundary wall in
Amritsar’s Khasa and outside the BSF Punjab Frontier headquarters
in Jalandhar handed the BJP a potent national security narrative.
Punjab DGP Gaurav Yadav’s observation that Pakistan’s ISI could
be linked to the incidents allowed the BJP to sharpen its attack,
projecting the Mann government as weak on security in a sensitive
border state where Khalistani elements are once again attempting to
regroup.
Privately,
BJP strategists argue that Punjab’s electorate is growing uneasy
over what they describe as “administrative drift” under the AAP
regime. The Opposition’s allegations about Mann allegedly arriving
drunk at an official function have further fueled the perception
battle around the chief minister’s image.
But
the BJP’s biggest weapon may well be its political engineering. The
party has quietly built a formidable network of imported
heavyweights. Punjab BJP chief Sunil Jakhar came from the Congress.
Union Minister Ravneet Singh Bittu crossed over from the Congress.
Former chief minister Capt Amarinder Singh is already in the saffron
camp. Now, the dramatic defection of Raghav Chadha and six AAP Rajya
Sabha MPs to the BJP has injected fresh momentum into the party’s
expansion plans.
The
message from Delhi is unmistakable: Punjab is no longer being treated
as an impossible state. After Bengal, the BJP now wants its next
great breakthrough in the nation’s volatile border belt.
What's
common between Suvendu and Sarma
For
decades, India’s opposition parties perfected one political art:
promoting bloodlines over battlefield commanders. The BJP, meanwhile,
perfected the opposite—spotting ambitious regional warhorses
abandoned by dynastic courts and turning them into chief
ministers. That is the common thread binding Suvendu Adhikari
and Himanta Biswa Sarma.
Adhikari
was not merely another Trinamool functionary. He was the architect of
Nandigram, the mass mobiliser who helped catapult Mamata Banerjee
from street fighter to Bengal’s undisputed ruler. For years, he was
seen as the natural political heir. But the succession script changed
when the party pivoted toward Abhishek Banerjee, the nephew waiting
in the wings. Adhikari walked out in 2020, joined the BJP, and became
not merely as Leader of Opposition, but the saffron camp’s King of
Bengal.
The
Assam story is eerily similar. Sarma spent 25 years building the
Congress in the Northeast brick by brick. Yet when succession
politics surfaced, the establishment appeared more comfortable
backing Gaurav Gogoi, son of former CM Tarun Gogoi. Sarma crossed
over to the BJP in 2015. Today, he is not just Assam’s dominant
leader but the BJP’s principal strategist across the Northeast.
The
lesson is brutal. Parties weakened by a dynasty often lose their most
effective generals. The BJP’s rise is not explained only by
electoral machinery or aggressive campaigning. Its real long game
lies in identifying leaders discarded by family-run parties,
rewarding ambition over inheritance, and converting political
resentment into raw electoral power.
Nitish
also Crowns His Prince
For
years, Nitish Kumar built his political brand around two claims —
clean governance and uncompromising opposition to dynastic politics.
With the elevation of his son Nishant Kumar as health minister in the
Samrat Choudhary-led Bihar government, that carefully cultivated
moral high ground has come crashing down.
The
symbolism was impossible to miss. Nishant, who joined the JD(U)
barely a month ago and has never fought an election, walked straight
into ministerial office after touching his father’s feet on stage.
No years in the organisational trenches. No electoral baptism. No
legislative experience. Just lineage.
For
decades, Nitish attacked Lalu Prasad Yadav for turning politics into
a family enterprise — first installing Rabri Devi as chief minister
and then promoting sons like Tejashwi Yadav. Today, Nitish stands
accused of embracing precisely the culture he once denounced.
The
BJP’s silence has been equally revealing. Prime Minister Narendra
Modi routinely attacks “parivarvaad” as a danger to democracy,
yet the saffron camp looked the other way when its ally inducted a
political novice solely because he carried the right surname. The
official explanation — that allies are free to choose their
ministers — sounded less like principle and more like political
convenience. The irony is devastating: the man who spent decades
attacking the dynasty has ultimately surrendered to it.
What
Next for the Trinamool?
What
lies ahead for the TMC is the million-dollar question. One thing,
however, is beyond doubt: Mamata Banerjee is a street-fighter, a
leader who thrives on direct confrontation. She is unlikely to allow
the BJP to govern West Bengal without resistance. Unlike Odisha,
where the BJP faces little push back, Bengal promises to remain a
battleground, with Banerjee personally taking on the government.
Yet,
time is not on her side. Her decision to project her nephew, Abhishek
Banerjee, as heir apparent has not inspired the same mass appeal that
she commands. That gap raises questions about succession and party
cohesion.
Rumours
during the election of around 15 Trinamool MPs being in touch with
the BJP — including some from the Rajya Sabha — were dismissed by
the party as psychological warfare. But could such speculation
acquire substance now? Bengal’s political history offers clues.
While Left cadres rarely defected, Congress leaders often switched
sides. The Trinamool itself is largely built on that Congress legacy
— leaders accustomed to being in power.
If
the perception grows that the BJP is entrenched in Bengal for the
long haul, defections cannot be ruled out. With 29 MPs, the Trinamool
remains a significant bloc — and a potential target. Don’t be
surprised if “Operation Lotus” quietly gathers pace in the state,
especially beyond minority-dominated constituencies.